Categories
Enjoyed Recommended

Hidden Gaming Gems of 2024

It’s been four years since I’ve done an end of year gaming round-up, and the itch to write has returned, since 2024 was a pretty solid year for games.

That said: I’d rather focus this year on the titles closer to the margins and the tiny releases that are easy to miss if someone isn’t directly telling you about them. I don’t need to be the one to tell you Balatro is good, or that the Like A Dragon series is the best it’s ever been, or that the new Indiana Jones game is pretty neat. (And I refuse to admit how much time I continue to sink into Fortnite.)

Games are in purchase order. All links are to Steam although many of these are available on other platforms.


Twenty Small Mazes – I can’t say it better than the actual game description: “This is a puzzle game with twenty small mazes. They’re good mazes, though.” Free to boot.

The Brew Barons – an arcade-style flight sim in the name of building your business homebrewing beer. No, that doesn’t make a lot of sense writing it out either, but trust me.

Minishoot’ Adventures – 2D Zelda-style exploration + twinstick bullet hell work shockingly well together.

Lorelei and the Laser Eyes – somewhere between Resident Evil 2 and the Rusty Lake series lies this wonderful puzzle hunt. Of the video game spaces I spent time in this year, Hotel Letztes Jahr will be the most memorable. Bonus points for the phenomenal soundtrack by Daniel Olsén, Linnea Olsson & Jonathan Eng.

[ECHOSTASIS] – the conclusion to the [ENIGMA] Trilogy (and practically three games in one itself), [ECHOSTASIS] is a sobering and unnerving first person existential crisis.

New Star GP – driving games are always a struggle; the balance between “arcade driftfest” and “simulation hell” is not one many devs can hit. But New Star Games holds the racing line perfectly in this F1-style joy.

Thank Goodness You’re Here! – the funniest game of the year, by a country mile.

The DevCats “Full Of Cats” Series – I stumbled onto DevCats last year, and my rule of thumb has quickly become “I see a new DevCats release, I buy it and play nothing else for a few hours”. This happened three times this year: Stray Cats in Cozy Town; A Park Full Of Cats; and A Shelter Full of Cats. Finding little kittens hidden in a giant environment is tremendous stress relief, and the proceeds go to cat charities.

I Am Your Beast – I remain in awe of Xalavier Nelson Jr.’s range. This is my Hotline Miami 3.

UFO 50 – not the lowest of profile releases, but having been stuck in development for years, flew under the radar more than I thought. A collective of the best indie devs make a fake console and knock out 50 unique games. I played nothing else for the two days that we lived at the airport trying to get home in October.

Nodebuster – I pretty much always have an incremental or idle game in progress to fall back on. Nodebuster was the one of those I enjoyed the most this year.

Up To Par – I am a sucker for rogulikes and a big fan of mini-golf, so roguelike mini-golf was always going to speak to me. Still being refined (the progression can be a little rough), but does what it says on the tin.

The Rise of the Golden Idol – a great sequel to 2022’s The Case of the Golden Idol, and quite a bit more accessible and enjoyable all around. Really looking forward to the DLC.

Categories
Enjoyed

Say What’s In Your Heart

Say what’s in your heart.
Make art from your soul.
Fight like hell.

Dark Sheik

Categories
Found

Full Implications at 3 AM

“Even though I did get his permission at the time, many people don’t understand the full implications of their actions and decisions and permission they give at 3 am.”

Xalavier Nelson Jr., “A Chaotic History of Clickolding, the Year’s Most Disturbing Game

(Clickolding is extremely good and extremely weird and everyone should play it.)